hell yeah thats one hellof a print been thinking of the next things to do was meant to do a lamp for our hall way im gonna do this in carbonfil petg thanks for sharing no wait ive another plan white and carbon petg

hi woofy what way did you print the arms at was they flat as ive tried twice now with different top layers and no supports but the top comes out all bubbly as their is no support but if we put supports in wont get them out to put wire though cheers

It was printed with Raise3D premium white PLA, the settings are the raise3D Speed Template on a glass bed at 80 C. I can't look up the exact settings until I get I to work tomorrow, but the only change is the bed temp and added M201 X500 Y500 to the start gcode. I found the top surface covered well with no support. Printed with the printer top removed.

im using a recycled petg white i had a go at the chain section last night im going to turn my heat down to 215 and slowing speed down as well as i got up this morning and the top was messy and the chain was crumbly its ok doing test cubes but when printing its a different game changer

cheers will get some on monday from my nut and bolt store man iv almost done the arms i think i would have been better doing then with a .05mm nozzle plus found problem with the top fil i got my lid of now coooling it quicker and the fan cover off think i will do some mods later i got some covers for the hot end but im getting their just the hardest to look forward to and thats the chains shall do them on a raft

only 1 problem she wants one on the landing now lol thought the little pot on top to hide the wires as their is 12 of them all tinned together goes well thanks for that design im gonna try some lithio lamp shades for the bedroom with david bowie on for her

Mine spends all of its time making prototype parts for a new 3D printer. Because all of the parts of my printer are all machined or custom weldments, mistakes are expensive. So, I use the N2 to "rough draft" before I machine. So much cheaper. On the main gantry bridge weldment, I will be taking the best three designs from FEA analysis and printing them off and then printing off a deflection test fixture and determining which has the stiffest structure for the least cost. Printing prototypes has helped me make a lot of revisions that were immediately obvious when I printed them. Little things like adding three threaded hoist rings so I can lift the gantry of the new printer with an overhead crane while aligning the linear bearings. I would like to do the Medusa as a test print on the new machine when it is complete.